cE Hirst es iE = Ba Vd 3 Een SARL HRP 2 TEA, despa td rhe stad 3 UE TIT: YS NFAT Fis YS > of victory. story behind it. ; Black Toney, but racin {mpressively. ; by Elmer Ferguson ® THERE IS ALWAYS drama and thrills - a-plently 4 the yearly renewal of the Kentu erby, and neky Derby AH hand-in-hand, a trium- virate of tradition, It may be the thrill of ; . a winning favorite. It may be the drama of N./ : a rank outsider roaring down the historic stretch at Churchill Downs, in the Run for the Roses. But no matter what the thrills, I doubt if any resuit, any development will equal for sheer $hieaat-catehing 'drama what hap- pened on May 17, 1924, the fiftieth running o is not even a Derby. For that was the day when through the Derby crowd there walked to the judges' stand a woman in mourn- ing, amid the wild cheers of the multitude, to receive the token That was the day Black Gold won the Derby, and this is the Black. Gold was 'owned by Mrs. R. M. Hoots, widow of an Oki oil man who had gone broke in his search for that very thing for which he named his horse: black gold. Disappointed, discouraged, he failed in health and died. In the waning days of his life, all Hoots and his family had was the hi Me Gold, They campaigned it north and south won some lesser races, termed "Derbies," with the black son' 0 against the brilliant performers who carried the colors of millionaire owners, of famous breeding farms of the Whitneys and Bradleys and Cochranes and Gold was rated as having a scant chance for the least until a few days before when he won the Derby Trial The legend is that when Hoots realized his days were num- bered, he exacted a promise from his wife that Black Gold should have a chance for high stakes--a chance in the Kentucky Derby, if for no other reason than reward for his honest performances. So, in 1924, the widow took the horse to Churchill Downs. There was no trumpet to herald his arrival. It was more like an outcast trying to break into high society. After all, Black Gold was a campaigner from the small tracks --out in the sticks--so they thought, as the field went to the post. But two minutes later when the field came under the wire, it was Black Gold which showed the way, beating out Chilhower from the rich Gallaher Stable by half a length in a driving finish. And the men of millions had to make way for the widow of an oil man who died broke, when the path was opened to the platform for the presentation of the trophies and the roses, while the band played "My Old Kentucky Home." Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed by Eimer, Ferguson, c/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St., Toronto. : Calvert oisriiiers LIMITED AMHERSTBURG, ONTARIO because thrills, drama the Derby which v inclairs, Black erby. Not, at Some Definitions For Gardeners. .... The field of horticulture has a language all its own which, in the beginning, is apt to puzzle the amateur gardener. The definitions that follow, then, are presented for the benefit of the novice who will be taking his first turn at the hoe this spring or summer: Annual--Plant which completes its growth cycle in a single year, and must be started anew from seed each year. ] Biennial --Plant that needs two years to flower from seed. Broadcast--To sow - seed directions from the hand. Compact--A plant with a dense habit of growth, as opposed to a straggly or sprawling habit. Compost--A fertilizer mixture consisting of decomposed (rotted) vegetable matter, peat, leafmold, manure, lime, etc. Cultivate--To prepare, or to pre- pare and use, soil for the raising of crops. Specifically, to loosen or break up soil, as in order to kill weeds. Cutting--Any section of a plant used to increase stock; ILE, a stem cutting. Syn. slip. Damping-off--A diseased coridi- tion of seedlings or cuttings caused by certain parasitic fungi which in- vade plant tissue near the ground to induce rot. Disbudding--The removal of in all superfluous buds to produce top quality bloom. Genus--A category of plants. The species of oak, for example, collectively forms of genus Quer- cus. Hardening-of--The process by which scedlings are gradually move ed from the house or greenhouse to the garden. This is done by ex- posing them to weather for an hour or so at first, and increasing the ~ time slowly until the plants are sturdy enough to be set permanent- ly in the garden. Herbaceous--This term refers to plants which do not form a woody stem that, persists all winter, Her- baceous perenirials are plants which die down to the ground in winter (or are cut down), only to spring up again next season, Humus--A brown or black ma- terial formed by the partial de- composition of vegetable or animal matter in the soil. Also, the organic portion of soil. Mulch--Any covering (eg, straw) spread on the ground to protect plants from heat, cold or drought, or to keep fruits clean, Perennia!----Plant that once estab- lished continues to live from year to year. Specifically, a green-stem- med plant that survives - northern winters. Puddling--The practice of dip- ping roots of young vegetable plants, small trees and shrubs into a thin mixture of clay and water to keep them moist until planted. Species--A group of plants which possess in common one or more distinctive characteristics. Variety--This term generally re- fers to a specific plant within a species (see species). From the standpoint of botanical nomencla- ture, a species is now regarded as the sum of its varieties. Thus Lili- um speciosum album is a variety of species L. speciosum which be- longs to the genus Lilium. : $cootermotorboat--A smart motor-scoater owner showed sea- minded folk at the Milan, Italy, Industry Fair that they needn't worry about buying a boat if they own a scooter. He fastened his on a catamaran hull, fixed so that the spinning rear wheel of the scooter move two wheels (arrow) projecting through the platform, These in turn, move the propeller, ee a ; FE Prion SE 4 He at A A No Second Money ninety - four sent Statistician M, Pitkin scurrying to the files to see if any writing man of the first order could challenge his record for longevity. Here are some figures he unearthed, arranged in ascend- ing scale. Chatterton died (by his own hand) at eighteen; Keats at twenty-six; Marlowe (in a tavern brawl) at twenty-nine; Shelley at thirty; Byron at thirty-six; Burn at thirty-seven; Poe at forty; Jane Austen at forty-two; De Maupas- sant at forty-three; Virgil, Moliére, and Balzac at fifty-one; Shakes- peare and Thackeray at fifty-two; Dante and Pope at fifty-six; Dickens at fifty-eight; Chaucer, Racine, and Hawthorne at sixty; Aristotle, Cole- Yidge, and Zola at sixty-two; Milton Cervantes at sixty-nine; Defoe at seventy; Melville at seventy-two; Washington Irving at seventy-six; .Sam Johnson at seventy-five; Browning at seventy-seven; [bsen at seventy-cight; Emerson at sev- enty-nine; Plato and Wordsworth at eighty; Meredith at eighty-one; Tennyson at eighty-three; Voltaire Tolstoy at eighty-two; Goethe and and' Benjamin Franklin at eighty- four; Carlyle at eighty-six; and Hardy at eighty-cight. "There were many grizzled stal- warts there," comments Mr. Pitkin, "but in the words of Percy Atkin- son, "There is no second money in »" "The death of G. B, Shaw at - at sixty-six; Conrad at sixty-seven; Jockey Joke--Looking like a bona fide contortionist, Jimmy Breck- ons smiles and hangs on to what are actually a fellow jockey's : boots and legs. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING BABY OHIOKS MEDICAL BUMMER-FALL peak market prices de pend on your spring chicks. Prompt shipment on pullets, started and day old. For cockerels. or mixed, day olds and started. order In advance, Bray Hatchery, 120 John N., Hamilton, IT ISN'T how much a poultryman pays = for his chicks that counts-but how mueh he gets for his money Invested. Every penny you save on cheap chicks remains a penny, "every penny you spend for better chicks gpows Into dollars, Don't be penny wise and pound foolish. Buy chicks with genuine breeding back of them, We pur. ohased over 4000 R O.P, pedigreed cock- erels all from high record hens to use in our matings. Also, started chicks, special broiler chicks, older pullets, capons, turkey poults, Catalogue. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD, Yorgus - Ontarlo STARTED PULLETS $21.00 per 100 up -- 3 week $29.90 -- 3 non-sexed, §12. Heavy cockerels, from non-sexed, $13 90, Heavy cockerels, from $3.90. [Immediate delivery. Galt Chicks eries, (alt, Ontario. DUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MEATS, Groceries, Smallwares, Confeo- tionery. Good weekly turnover. § lvl rcoms in rear. Selling price $6,600. nN health reason for selling, Located on Main Street, Newmarket: Apply: A. B. Jarvis, "hone 10787 or 1028W, SERVICE STATION on Highway 17, 80 miles west of Pembroke. Modern rest rooms and lunch counter, 2-room cottage, No limitations to the possibilities of this site. Contact Box 193, Deep River, Ont, the hall of fame. Take the case of Methuselah's grandpap, Jared. He lived to be 962 years old--only seven years less than his illustrious grandson. That wasn't good enough; he remains to this day unknown, unhonored, and unsung." GREAT GOLD RUSH OF 1898 STILL REMEMBERED BY OLD-TIMERS When recently, demolition men tore down yet another of Dawson City's log cabins they discovered under the floorboards gold dust worth over $3,000. It dated from the days when 45,- 000 men and women struggled over mountain ridges, shot the rapids of the mighty Yukon River, and clam- bered through bog and over bare rock in the greatest gold rush in history--the Klondyke Rush of "98. drinks in gold dust-- men like Dangerous Dan McGrew and Soapy Smith, Siwash Carmack, and the Indian Skookum Pete, Bull Ball- antyne, and Charlie Benguelesta and others, Dangerous Dan lived only in the mind of the poet Robert Louis Ser- vice; Soapy Smith was shot down in a gun-battle with law officers; Siwash and Skookum are dead. But Bull Ballantyne and Charlie Ben- guelesta, -and many another old- timer of the '98 rush are alive, and still looking for gold along the crecks that flow from Solomon's Dome into the Klondyke River. A correspondent now back in Britain, who recently talked with them, says; "They have a far-away look in their eyes and gold-fever in their brains. Once a hell-raising town, Dawson City is to-day but a shadow, its log cabins dilapidated, its streets peopled by old mem who "came up the Yukon" fifty-odd years ago in answer to the cry "GOLD!" . At night they meet in the Flora Dora Saloon, where. Diamond- Toothed Gertie and Klondyke Katie (now in her eighties) danced the can-can. "I remember Christie Johnson offering Cecily Marion her weight in gold if she'd marry him," says old Charlie Benguelesta. "They stood over there, under them gold letters F-L-O-R-A D-O-R-A." Ed Andersen, another old-timer, recalls what happened When Swift- water Gates struck it rich, "He was a dishwasher," he says, "but when he hit pay-dirt he bought a top hat 'and strutted like a peacock. "Another lucky one was Harry Gleave. Harry came in with one dollar' in his pocket and an axe over his shoulders, struck gold, won the Flora Dora over a game of poker," and made a fortune." Ed himself was both lucky and unlucky. He panned thousands of dollars' worth of gold dust in two days, but somebody hit him" over the head with a champagne bottle, since when he has not been able to remember where his claim was! Still Panning Such are the stories you - could now renamed the Royal Alexander Hotel. The town's social life centred on the saloon. In a conspictous place on the bar were scales for weigh- ing gold dust. One bar-roont at- tendant gathered enough dust from the floor sawdust to buy himself a rich mining claim, Fortungs were lost in gold rou- lette and faro, and what the gambl- ing-room didn't get was spent on drink and the dance-hall girls, Once the fourth largest town in Canada, Dawson's population to- day is not above 450 meh, women, and children, and on every side is evidence .of the Gold Rush days in which it still lives. . The fire-engine standing on a looks like a Thermos flask on wheels--it must be 50 years old. Children clamber over the stage coach in which the fabulous cans can girls, the min, Mother Mary Mark, and men like Bull Ballan- tyne and E. K. Clark rode between their cabins and "the city." It slipped through the fingers of rip-roaring men who paid for their hear in the Ilora 'Dora Saloon," plot of land near one of the shops. To-day E. K. Clark lives in a .cave on Bonanza Creek, where two men made the strike that set the Yukon aflame in '98. "Ie's 76, and he hasn't struck it rich vet," said ~Bull DRallantyne. "And le does his gold-panning on his knees --because his legs are paralysed." A big man is Bull Ballantyne. They say he carried a piano over the White Pass on a sledge and floated it up the Yukon River on a raft. To-day he dogs odd jobs and tinkers with a 1917 Ford. Old- er by six years is the car in which Jim Diamont drives vou to the airstrip when you leave. "See That Hill?" The mining ofticials drive big, shining American cars; there is a school for their childrey, a church, a hospital, a few shops, a jetty for the stern-wheeler paddle-boats that chug-chug up the Yukon with freight. And there is a Royal Can- adian Mounted Police H.Q., where an old-timer named Jimmy Dines minds the telephone. But just the same Dawson City lives in the past. "See that hill, mister?" says Charlie Clark. "That's called Sol- omon's Dome. The Mother Lode of gold is in there somewhere. No "one's found it yet. And when some- one does find it, you'll see a rush such as has never been seen be- fore." Now in his eighties and a little tottery on his legs, Old Char- lie Clark still wanders off looking for his bonzana. "I'll strike it one day," he tells you. Charlie came in with old Moth- er Mary Mark, Superior of the hospital and convent near the R.C.LLP. post. i Now in her late seventies, she talks in the terms--one hears in the Ilora Dora--about striking ft rich, about pay-dirt and grub- stakin', Our correspondent arrived at the hospital just as an old-timer by the name of John Donoghue died. Mother Mary Mark drew the sheet gently up overehis head and said: "He's going outside for the first time since we both came, in 1898. But I'm sure his spirit will return Jv the Klondyke." Aoudads And Moms--Exploring their quarters at C entral Park zoo, three baby Aoudads get accustomed to their surroundings under the watchful eyes of their mothers. They were born on three successive days early in April. First.introduced to the zoo in 1939, the animals are Barbary sheep found along the coast of North Africa. Sucker Stuff Soon after Dan Parker won a by-line for himself on the sports page of a big New York paper, he set about exposing the racket of 'a notorious race-traci tout who brazenly. insisted he could fix any claiming © race at the Saratoga meeting then in progress and of- fered to do so upon receipt of the modest sum of one dollar in cash. Parker's column bristled with in- dignation. and scorn. Within the following week, however, he re- ceived over a hundred letters en- closing currency, Would Mt. Park- er forward same to the lovely gentleman who could fix races? , Parker told his story to Arthur Brisbane, who didn't believe it. When Parker produced the actual letters, Brisbane sighed, and re- marked, "I was wrong all the time." "You mean about my fab- ricating the story of the letters?" asked Dan, "No," "said Brisbane. "In my estimate of the mental age of newspaper readers. I always put it at twelve. 1 guess it's nearer eight." . Incidentally, Parker's book, The ABC of Horse Racing, was design- ed to prove that betting on the nags, has never paid. A coupon ad headed "You can't win on horse races" pulled seventeen orders. An ad of exactly the same size and in the same newspaper headed "If you must bet on horse races , , ." pulled two hundred and forty. L surpasses it in Now They're Growing "Steaks" in Barrels Good news comes from the U.S. that soon there may be more meat for the whole world at much small- er cost than today. . The new "meat" is synthetic, but is as rich, succulent and tasty as sirloin steak, It was first produced by the British scientist, A. C. Thaysen, in 1940, from yeast, is indistinguishable from beef, and food value. The British Government has been toy- ing with the idea of starting a "meat" factory in Jamajca that will turn out 2,000 tons of "beef" a year. Thaysen developed yeast merely as a vegetable food, but an Ameri- can scientist, Carl Lindegren, of Washington University, has deve- loped it to reproduce the flavors of known foods. He places 125 Ib, of yeast in a vat containing 7,000 gallons of water, 14 tons of mo- lasses (on whose sugar the ycast feeds) and a fixed quantity of am- monia, which provides the nitro- gen to turn the yeast multiples into protein. In twelve hours the yeast multiplies to sixteen times its original weight, until it becomes a dry, brownish powder with a nutty, meaty flavor, : ' Yeast-meat costs a fifth of the price of beef, and a ton of the pro- duct, instead of taking two years to produce, as beef does on the hoof, is ready in twelve hours, DYEING AND OLEANING HAVE you anything needs dyeing or clean. Ing? Write to us for Information, We are glad to answer your questions. De- partment fl. Parker's Dye Works Limited, 791 Yonge St., Toronto, FOR BALE USE HY-MIN LIQUID FERTILIZER Use Hy-Min liquid fertilizer to start your tobacco and tomatoes, Excellent ylelds on vegetable crops side dressed with Hy-Min, New low prica $12.00 for 5 gallon drum, Ask your local dealer or Write Hy-Trous Company of Canada Limited, Cornwall, Ontarlo FREE CIRCULAR OF USES ON REQUEST OILS, GREASES, TIRES Paints and varnishes, Electric Aotors, Electrical Appliances, Refrigerators, Fast Freezers, Milk Coolers and Feed Qrinders. Hobbyshop Machinery. Dealers wanted. Write: Warco Grease and Ol Limited, Toronto, HARLEY DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES ] Parts and Service. C.0.D. orders fled promptly. A large assortment of recdn- ditloned motorcycles at reasonable prices. BERT E. KENNEDY & BON 119 College Street, Toronto BIG BARGAIN BEUTIO TANKS 200 gallon steel tar coated $37.00 cash with order, also special savinks alzes 300 to 500 gallons tar and glass coated. -Limited stock underwriters label 200 gal- lon painted ofl tanks $43.00 while they last. Write for catalogua stainless enamel sinks, combination laundry tray and sink, streamline porcelain enamel laundry tub, showers, stoves, refrigerators, oil burn- erg, pressure systems, REECE ED DBATH- TUBS §60.00, right or left hand draln Lovely Martha Washington and Rich. ledge stainless threa piceo bathroom set, white or coloured. All shipments delivered 5. V., John- ectsville, On- your nearest railway station son Plumblng Supplies, St v 000D RESOLUTION -- Every sbterse FJ Rheumatic Pains or Neuritls sho Dixon's Remedy. MUNRO"S DRUG STORE 335 Elgin, : $1.25 Express Prepaid ® FEMINEX © One- woman tells another, Take su, "FEMINEX" to help alleviate paln, tresg and nervous tension assoclated monthly 'perlods, $5.00 Postpaid In plain wrapper, POST'S CHEMICALS 880 QUEEN ST. EAST TORO POST'S ECZEMA BALVE BANISH the torment of dry ecsema and weeping skin troubles, Post's E Salve will not disappoint you. Itching, scaling, burning ecsems, ringworm, pimples and athlete's (oot, Ottawa respond readily to the stainless odor! ointment, regardless of how stubborn bopeless they seem. . PRICE $9.00 PER JAB POST'S REMEDIES Bent Post Free on Recelpt of Pri 189 Queen Bt. RH, Corner of Lobla, Toronto SLEEP like a new born baby--deep, D# ful and sound. Take ananog non-h forming "Kersom Tablets', ush § for liberal supply---also 100 tablets $5.00. Imperial Industries, P.O. Box § Winulpex. MYERS CORN REMOVER Positively and safely removes CORN AND CALLOUSES Satisfaction guaranteed. Send $1,090 Myers & Sons, 878 Manning Ave., ° OPPORTUNITIES FOB MEN: AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Qreat Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession, good w Thousands of successful Marvel gradus America's Greatest System tHustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS 158 Bloor St. W., Toronto Branches: "44 King 8t., Hamilton 73 Rideau §t.,, Ottawa NEW SECRET. TobAcco Habit Stopped. Freo information. Belanger, ' Plamon . Alberta. » EASY TO QUIT SMOKING Use Tobacco Ellminator, a sclentifio treat. ment, uulckly stops craving for tobacog, rida tha systam of nicotine. C. King Phas - macal Limited, P.O, Box 673, London, Ontarlo, MOVIE ACTING YOUR AMBITION? Bt now. Halpful Information guide book! $1.00. H. Gordon, 108 N. Ruple Avenud, Washington Pennsylvania, U.8.A, $10 HOUR! Posalblel At Homo! Invisiols reweave cuts, teary, moth holes, snag urns in clothing. 23 samples, prin atgh steel tool, including material for life And Instructions, $4.90 cpupletel sual. antecd. Literature Free. Hersch (ox, Nok 125E, Route No. 7, Tucson, Arizona Play piano by ear, auleckly, Easy shogt- cut system. Gives tricks, pointers, fof vlaylng correct bass, maln secret in plage Ing by ear. House of Wallace, Dépt. AA, 1173 Phillips Place, Montreal. NURSERY STOCK RED RICH, now, amazing, rage of atrawe barry world. Huge berries, tremendous yields, Neder, sweeter and hardier. Plant and plek same year, Pelmo Park Perens tarin nial Garden, Westyn, Ontario © TIRES PATENTB 1" Rabter Bucky Tires. New Rlibber, SO conts per foot. Old tires replaced, AN OFFER to every Inventor--List of (3- $2.00 ench Walsh & Baker, Edmund ventions and full information sent fred. Street, Cuarletgn Place, Ontario. 'hone The RNameay Co., Registered Patent Attors 58\W. I nova. 273 Bank Street, Ottawa. ; T ES THERSTON 10 ~ BROAD roasted bronze turkey poults, FETHER TO: HAUGH & Company, Pe. oe tent Sollcltors. Established 1800, $30 April. May, June hatch Governtment . fey ' " apbroved. [O06 . Speucnigs. Theke Bay Street, Torento Booklet of Informe. appro e087, _Sphrucorne itkey tion on request - ~ Farm, R. 8, Dunnville, Ontarto. USE HY-MIN LIQUID FERTILIZER Beat for African Vielsts says Joan Copo- ind of Copaland's Violet House. 8 or. ean fie ask your your local dealer or write Hy -Trous Company of Canada, Cornwall, Ontario FREE CIRCULAR ON HOW TO GROW BETTER AFRICAN VIOLETS, TIRES Hamilton's Largest Tire Stora Since 1933. Used Tires. $7.00 and up. Retreaded Tires, 600 x 16, $14.00 Other sizes, priced acs cordingly. Vuleanizing and retreading aer- vice. All work gusrantesd All orders C.O.D. 3200 required with order. Wa pay charges ope wav, Penlnsnla Tire Corgor- ation, 95 King Street West, Hamilton, Phone 77-1822, MR. FARMER! If you're troubled with Rata, send $1.60 for tried, proven and guaranteed method of eliminating thom, Satisfaction, or money refunded Hil, Box 8021, Bautlefield Station, Jackson 4, Miss, CRESN WART REMOVER Leaves no scars. Your Druggist sclls CRESS, HE DYNAMITED THE NAILS --n V When Charley Balloun of Tama County tore down his old barn, he hung ten 1i-1h. sticks of dyna- mite approximately in the center of the barn. Then he closed the doors and windows tightly, lighted the fuse, and ran for dear life. It turned out just as he planned. A few boards were split, but most were sprung just enough to make the nail heads easy to get with a wrecking bar. ! Before you try it, get the counsel of an expert on explosives, Charley advises, Might be a sound idea 'also to let the fire department know what you're up to. SAFES Protect your BOOKS and UASH from FIRE and THIEVES. We have a sire and type of Safe, or Cabinet, for any purpose. Visit us or write for prices ete., to Dept. W. J.6¢J. TAYLOR uMiTED TORONTO SAFE WORKS' 143 Front St, R,, Toronto Established 1855 TEACHERS W ANTED Quallfied Protestant WANTED Teachae for ¢ L Room (Principal), Hermon fchool, Township School Aren of Mayo. Starting the 1952.43 term. Salary $2,100, Stats quulitictations, experience, and nama of last inspector A WwW Ramsbottom, Hecrctary Treasurer, Hermon, Ontario WANTED WANTED --Small tobacco store to rent og buy. ar fob as Caretaker by middle nged - married mon 154 Church Street, Relle- villa, Ontarlo LOGY, LISTLESS, OUT OF LOVE WITH LIFE? Wouldn't you like to jump out of bed feeling fine? Not up to par? . .. you may suffer from an upset syatom. If you aro constipated your food may not digest freely --gan may bloat up your stomach . . . all the fun and sparkle 00a out of life. That's when you need 'arter's Littlo Liver Pills, These mild vegotablo pills bring you quick reliof from constipation and so help promote the flow of digestive juices. Soon you'll feel that happy days are hero again thanks to Carter's! Vhy stay sunk? Got Carter's Little Liver Pills. Always have them on hand. Only 350 from any druggist. a HARNESS & COLLARS Farmers Attention--Consult your near- est Harness Shop about Staco Harness Supplies. We goods only Staco Leather. The goods are right and so are our prices. We manufac- ture in our factorles: Harness Horse Collars, Sweat Pads; Horse Blankefs and Leather Travelling Goods. Insist on Staco Brand Trade-marked Goods and you get satisfaction. Made only by SAMUEL TREES CO. LTD. 42 Wellington St. £., Toronto sell our through your local goods dealer. --~ Write for Catalogue - ISSUE 19 -- 1952 LC F.Nogo Jeol | J.-H » Canada's Seanclond Smoke "foe A hp - - re Ba i WE aa E iy he ¢ - 2 LAr hs > A INS ie hr 1 aes Co § HL bol A 1 € prs pen] Se pry Zod nen 3 on PR od al» LA, Lesher - ou i